Sunday, December 21, 2014

The man unlocked the front door of a modest Mountain View home
after a demanding morning of work, looking forward to a quiet lunch and the
rest of the day off. “Honey, I am home.” (He still could not believe he was
saying that.)

A light clattering of dishes was the man’s only response.
The man moved through the living room towards the small kitchen-and-dining
area, and was welcomed by a strong smell of honeysuckle. The man recognized the
scent, but he usually did not notice it to be this strong.

The man reached the kitchen doorway and saw the woman, who
was arranging plates and cutlery on the counter. Her long dark hair was clasped
into a makeshift bun behind her head. She wore a simple white summer dress that
flowed from her shoulders to her ankles, with a thin white belt to provide a
hint of the wondrous figure the man knew to be underneath.

The man saw his best friend, lover, and most recently, his
fiancée. The man had taken her and her infant son into his heart, and they have
taken him into their lives and their home. It was just about a week ago when the
man had let the lease on his Daly City apartment expire, but he had already
been practically living in this home for over a month. Since they became
engaged, the couple had begun consolidating their lifestyles in preparation of
the married life that would officially start in a few short weeks. The two had
agreed that they were already living as husband and wife; the only difference
after the wedding would be that they would both have a few additional legal
rights.

The woman, who happened to have the entire workday off,
turned toward the man and greeted him with a warm smile. “Hi, Hon,” she said
slowly. “How was your morning?”

The light that had been in the man’s face at the first sight
of his beloved faded quickly as he felt a twinge of…uncertainty… niggling at
the edge of his consciousness. Something about the woman’s voice, as well as
her motion and posture, seemed… off.

The man dismissed his reservations, especially since he
could not explain the basis for them. “It was okay. Work as usual,” he said
flatly, trying not to sound bothered. “Is
Isamu sleeping?”

“Maybe. He’s actually at the day care today.” The woman’s voice
sounded uncharacteristically hollow. Then, with a little cheek: “I figured we
could have the afternoon alone.”

The man studied the woman’s naughty expression carefully. The
harrying uncertainty had returned and felt much stronger now. Her eyebrows seemed
to arch a little too much. The curl of her playful smile was a tad too high.
And why was she wearing lipstick? She usually does not wear makeup at home — just
as she would not use so much of her favorite honeysuckle perfume.

And now that the man had heard more of the woman’s voice, he
noticed that — while it sounded like his fiancée — the tone and inflection did
not seem right. And was there an underlying hint of… an accent?

The woman started to sweep forward across the floor toward
the man, who was still in the kitchen doorway. “Why don’t I make lunch while
you change out of that suit,” she said, “but first… how about a ‘hello kiss’?”

And as the woman spoke, she stepped under the kitchen
skylight, her white dress catching the sun and making her even more radiant
than she already was. God, she was lovely.

And horrifying.

The man quickly turned away and moved into the wide space of
the living room. He was actually struggling for breath as he felt a chill of
fear grip his heart and he knew — he knew
— that this was not his fiancée.
The man also knew that his was not the first time he had encountered…
something… pretending to be someone he loved.

Bukit Kiara, Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, 1998

The man stepped through the third floor entrance of the
glass lift of the nearly-completed new headquarters of the Malayan Securities
and Exchange Commission. He had just finished a tour of the finished areas by
his old college friend, who by this time had been a long-time employee of the
Commission, as well as the friend's immediate supervisor. Both of them were proud to
show off the new offices into which they will be migrating in a few months.

Now, all the two Commission men could think about was lunch,
and each proceeded to convince each other that the three of them should partake
at their respective favorite eateries in Taman Tun. The man had no preference and
decided to abstain from the debate, instead taking in the view through the
glass walls. The lift overlooked a wide atrium, with a partially laid indoor courtyard
below. It was mildly adorned with a few bagged trees off to one side near the
main entrance, as well as various potted perennial
plants scattered across the incomplete flooring. While he waited, the man amused
himself by landscaping the unfinished areas of the courtyard in his mind. He was
nearly completed when he realized they should have been on the ground floor by
now. In fact, the man just noticed that the three of them had not moved at all.

“Hai-yah! I thought they’d fixed this problem the other
week,” moaned the man’s friend. They all had ridden this lift up to the third
level, where it remained throughout their brief tour of the
in-the-process-of-modeling offices. But now the elevator stood unresponsive to
the panel controls.

With a final grunt of disgust, the man’s friend stepped out
of the lift to lead the trio to the staircase across the raised gallery which rimmed
the atrium.

They were more than halfway to the stairs when the man heard
a soft yet hearty laugh — a familiar laugh he had not heard in almost two
decades. He turned back toward the lifts behind him, and his eyes widened with
disbelief.

Down the gallery, near the back corner a few metres past the
defunct elevator bank, the man saw the sparkling sea-green eyes… that cheeky
and mildly seductive smile…

It was Danielle — his first true friend in the U.K., and the
first (and at that time, the only) girl he had ever loved. But it could not be
her. She looked just as she did on that rainslicked train platform that cold March evening over 18 years ago, two nights before she… died. Instead of
wearing the man’s old school-age sweater and sweatpants, Danielle was clad in a
flowing white dress that gleamed with reflected midday sunlight that shined through
the glass roof above.

The light radiating off her seemed to smell of honey.It was all so… intoxicating.

The man blinked, mystified. Was she… an angel? he began to
ponder as he felt his heart become lodged in his chest. His perception began to
literally fray at the edges. The surrounding Commission building blurred into
obscurity as his vision tunneled, locking into a narrow corridor leading to the
distant face of his lost love. A face that was now turned from him as the teenaged
figure in the white dress started to slowly step away, down the gallery toward some
unfinished offices. Then she looked back over her shoulder, and the man dazedly
saw that the 16-year-old Danielle he remembered suddenly looked older — as if
she had lived to be his age — and her beauty somehow increased twentyfold.

And he heard her laughter again — deeper… huskier. It seemed
to be all the man could hear as he felt… something… clutch his steadfast heart
and somehow pull his entire being forward — as if he were suddenly lighter than
air — forward to follow the shapely figure in white that he wanted so very much
to…

A sudden weight on his shoulder snapped the man out of his
reverie. The weight was the size of his friend’s hand. “Xum? Where are you
going? The stairs are this way.”

The man was stunned as his full hearing and vision suddenly
returned. He gazed at his friend for a moment, unable to find the words, then he
turned back down the gallery toward…

Nothing.

The alluring woman in white had vanished.

The man finally found his voice. “Over there… did you see…?”

His friend’s perplexed expression told the man that he was
the only one who saw and heard the vision in white. To his companions, the man
was merely wandering off in the wrong direction.

The man blinked, disoriented. Did he imagine this? This was not the first time he had encountered Danielle after her death, and even then
he was not sure if that experience, beautiful as it was, was all in his mind. Reason
started to push at the numbness clouding the man’s thoughts. This all made no
sense. If that was really Danielle, why would she appear to him here? And why
now? Unless… did she have some sort of message for him? Or did she need to…
show him something?

All he had known for sure was that he had just lost his first
love for the third time in his life. The man drew a hand across his eyes. He
was painfully reminded of how bleak his world had become when that one
particular light in his life had gone out.

The disorientation quickly moved to nausea. The man could
swear that the honey that was tickling his nose moments before was replaced by
burning sulphur mixed with rotten onions.

“Mister Xum doesn’t look so good,” the supervisor said to
the friend as they both helped the man to his feet. The man wasn’t even aware
that he had fallen. The awful odor still lingered in the air, and the man
realized that he seemed to be the only one who noticed it. Despite the man’s
reassurances that he was all right, the friend insisted on taking him home.
There would be no lunch in Taman Tun that day.

It would be weeks later, when the man met his friend to finally
have that lunch, when he heard what the friend had found out after a bomoh (a
Malay shaman) was hired by the Commission to “spiritually cleanse” their new
headquarters. It seems that part of the building was unknowingly constructed
over an unmarked plantation graveyard, and the spirits that were disturbed by
that transgression attracted other, more wicked spirits to the site.

The man listened intently. While rational thought would casually
dismiss this explanation as superstition, many of the locals in this country,
the man’s friend included, truly believed in magic — black magic in particular.
Bomohs were recognized as a legitimate profession. The man had also read local news
reports about events that can be considered supernatural phenomena, as well as
the passing of legislation forbidding particular mystical practices. Further,
the man had a few of his own experiences that defied rational explanation, and even
though they evoked some partial doubt they also enabled him to keep an open
mind.

The friend continued. Most of these “evil” spirits were
mischievous… imps, for lack of a better word (and the friend suspected they were
the reason the lift and other functions of the building were not working
properly), but the bomoh had a difficult time driving away one particular spirit
— a spirit that was… nastier. This spirit made the man’s friend so unnerved
that he actually looked around the eatery to be sure no one else could overhear
before he whispered the name of it:

A pontianak.

The friend was very disappointed that the man did not know
what that was, and thus had to provide an explanation he did not want to give. The
friend revealed that a pontianak was a vampiric succubus that preys on (read:
kills) men. They tend to take the appearance of their victim’s ideal woman, or
a female loved one, to lure them into their grasp.

The friend was about to explain what he had heard a pontianak
does to its victims, when he noted the stricken look on the man’s face. “Xum,”
he said with shock, “you saw it, didn’t you?”

The man did not give him a reply to this question. He did
not need to. Both men no longer felt like eating.

The man did not even consider how preposterous his
suspicions were about the woman in his fiancée’s home. But if he was dealing was another pontianak
(or maybe the same one?), turning away seemed to make it disappear before.

“Xum, what’s the matter?”

“Uh… nothing.Just…” the
man started to respond without turning around. He felt panic edge into his voice.
She (It?) was still behind him.

It was then that the man realized that he wasn’t feeling the
same… disorientation he felt during his encounter in Malaysia. Perhaps the
dress and the honey-like smell were triggering some post-traumatic stress… and
his suspicions were unfounded.

None of this was really coherent thought, of course — just a
rising sense of doubt that made the man unaware of the woman-in-white’s
approach until she had playfully jumped onto his back. Her giggly squeal
erupted into a loud shriek as the man’s instincts and aikido training took
over. The woman instantly found herself flat on her back across the couch,
breathless.

The man, tipped forward from his throw, was crouching just a
few inches over the woman’s surprised, upside-down face. It was the spitting
image of his beloved, but he still felt in his heart that this was not truly
her.And yet he felt her weight… her
warmth… neither of which he expected from what little he had known of a pontianak.
This was definitely no spirit.

The man attempted to stand, but was held back by the woman’s
hands that quickly snapped upward to encircle his neck.

“Mmmm…kinky,” the
woman below him purred. Her chocolate eyes locked onto his as she smiled
seductively. “C’mere…”

In that brief moment the woman almost sounded like his
fiancée. Despite what his eyes and ears were telling him, the man somehow knew that
he shouldn’t accept this woman’s inverted kiss. Instead he slipped his head
beside her right ear, as his right hand brushed the edge of the white dress
collar, as well as the underlying silvery laced bra strap, off her right
shoulder. With that one fluid motion, any lingering doubt in the man’s mind
quickly evaporated.

This may not be a pontianak, but this woman was definitely
not his fiancée.

“Who are you?” the
man said, resetting the woman’s clothing. His sharp voice seemed to stun her into
loosening her grip, which allowed the man to break free and get to his feet. He
stepped away from the woman, who remained sprawled on the couch, his eyes never
leaving her face. Her mouth was held in a mock-pout, as if to jokingly admit to
her deception.

The man was about to ask his question again, with greater
intensity this time, but was preempted by another female voice.

“Xummy, stop.”

The man turned from the woman who looked like his fiancée to
face… another woman that looked like his fiancée. This one stood framed in the
hallway which led to the bedrooms, wearing a slinky black negligée and a look of
concern.

The man scanned the new arrival carefully. While the negligée
left little to the imagination, its lacy pattern did obscure this woman’s
stomach and her collarbone. How
convenient, he thought drily. At the very least, this woman’s posture appeared
to be correct, but still…

The man pretended to shake his head in disbelief, but he was
actually checking the coffee table and mentally selecting items to serve as potential
weapons in case he was facing another imposter. (The heavy television remote became
the top candidate.) He then looked up at her.

“You” the man slowly rumbled, unsure how to address the woman
in black. “What was the first alcoholic drink I ever had?”

The woman in black arched an eyebrow… at just the right
extent. “Bunnahabhain whisky. But it wasn’t so much of a drink as a sip. You
said it was the best turpentine you ever tasted.” She smiled slightly,
reflecting the man’s smile of relief. “Can you let my sister up now?”

“Your…?” The man blinked in shock… and embarrassment. “This
is Yumiko?”

The man had known very little about his beloved’s only
sibling, because his fiancée told very little about her. But he was looking
forward to meeting Yumiko when he heard she would be arriving in a few weeks to
attend the wedding. Apparently, she decided on an earlier visit.

A few lengthy apologies and a glass of water later, the man
found himself sitting between the two identical women on the living room couch
as they told him their plan behind the deceit. How the sister was to
briefly pretend to be the fiancée in the kitchen, so the man would be surprised
when he went into the master bedroom to change, and find his actual fiancée in
bed waiting for him. The sister would then leave the couple for an “afternoon
alone” and meet up with them for formal introductions at dinner that evening.

Given that his fiancée had not once mentioned to the man
that her sister was her identical twin — which the man believed should be the
second thing to mention about your sister after stating that you have one — the
man surmised that she had planned to pull this prank on him since the day they
first got together.

However, the fiancée did not plan on the sister going “off-script.”

“It used to be something we’d do when we were going to
different colleges,” the twin eventually explained. “Testing each other’s
boyfriends to see if they truly knew us.”

“Actually, it was just you ‘testing’ my boyfriends, Yumi,” the fiancée said icily. Her dark eyes were
serious… and sorrowful.

The twin ignored the stare. “Well, this one certainly passed,”
Yumiko sighed, casually grasping the man’s knee. “I don’t think he was fooled
for a minute. Too bad. I wanted to see if he really—” She quickly bit her lip
when she noticed the fiancée’s eyes narrowed. “Er… what I mean to say,” she
stammered, removing her hand, “is I don’t think I need to worry about you with
this one, Nami.” She paused. “Or… do I?” Her index fingers made a twirling motion around each other to
illustrate her earlier heels-over-head incident.

“Oh, no. No,” the fiancée immediately reassured her twin. “He
never… I mean, the only time I saw him this intense was when...” she stopped
when the realization struck her. “Oh my god, Xum. Did you think I was in trouble?
Kidnapped and replaced by some weird
evil-clone psycho hose beast?”

The man cleared his throat. Hearing that situation described
out loud, even in his fiancée’s serious tone, made the pontianak scenario in
his mind seem all the more ridiculous. “I honestly did not know what to think,”
he lied. “Though I am glad to know you do not have an evil twin.”

“Oh, she can be downright evil,” the fiancée laughed,
tossing her sister an all-knowing look.

After a few more moments of chatting, a final apology from
the man, and a reassuring joke about being swept off of one’s feet, the twin
sister departed with a promise to meet up for dinner that evening.

Upon the closing of the front door, the man ran a hand
across his forehead and returned to the couch. The fiancée silently snuggled up
next to him, and felt that he was trembling slightly.

“Hey,” she said softly. “For a moment… back there… you
looked positively spooked.” Her fingers caressed his face. “Are you sure you’re
okay?”

The man was incapable of answering at first. “I… I am fine,” he finally whispered. “I am
just relieved that it was not…” He paused. He did not want to continue this
line of conversation. Not now.

“Xum, what is it?”

“I was… just a little surprised is all,” he smiled, albeit
faintly. “After all, how often do I see someone be in two places at once?”

She gazed seriously at him. The man’s carefully light tone
was not fooling her in the least.

The man was all too aware. “I will tell you,” he asserted, taking
her hand. “But later. Okay?”

The fiancée nodded. She knew the man well enough that she
could let the subject drop until he was ready to pick it up again.

The woman smirked. “Oh, she
spoiled it — not you. Though I must admit I didn’t expect you to get frisky in
the living room…”

The man blushed a little, even though he knew she was
joking. “Sorry about that,” he shrugged. "She jumped me. I responded by
instinct.”

“Serves her right, throwing herself at you like that. Old
habits die hard…” the woman’s voice trailed off wistfully, which made the man
wonder how much hurt her sister’s “boyfriend tests” had caused. He was about to
place a reassuring hand on her shoulder, but she suddenly giggled a bit. “I
wish I had a tape recording of that scream,” she sighed. Her eyes flickered
naughtily. “I guess I forgot to warn her that you’re into kung-fu fighting…”

“That was not— wait a minute…” The man was astonished at the
sudden realization. “Was all that really a prank on me… or on her?”

The fiancée said nothing. With a playful smile she gently pushed
her husband-to-be down on the couch.As
she straddled over him, the man reached up and gently tugged at the right strap
of the negligée, fully expecting to see the small scar on the woman’s right
clavicle which her twin sister did not share. He was not disappointed.

Did not expect to get
frisky in the living room indeed, the man grinned as he continued to tug.

Friday, October 17, 2014

On
this week's The Line It Is Drawn, I had the pleasure of revisiting a topic I had done five months ago, this time spotlighting 16
DC Comics cartoons (spanning six decades) that are no longer being produced. Can you name them all?

See the full wraparound cover version (as well as the fantastic pieces my compatriots have created) here.

(Based on the cover of "Crisis on Infinite Earths #1" by George Pérez. Done with respect to him and all of the talent behind these fantastic programmes.)

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Weeks ago, Namiko, the kids and I went on a road trip to
Colorado to visit Namiko’s sister.Since
we had planned to be on the road for a few days with an agreement to limit “screen
time” for the kids (we didn’t want them to miss the scenery), I made sure to
pack plenty of music for the trip.

By the time we had reached the Nevada border, the kids had both
requested to hear “Hold on Tight”, a catchy 1980s hit performed by Samantha Fox
that gushed with vivacious 1950s-style rockabilly.

Namiko, immediately recognizing the request, started to thumb
through the sleeves of my massive CD folder in a fruitless search of the “Touch
Me” album that housed the song. “I don’t think your dad packed that one.”

“Actually, I did. It’s on the green disc near the front.”

A few seconds later Namiko pulled out from the folder a
metallic green CD-R marked only with three hand-scrawled letters: S, F, and X.

Shortly after I had returned from Japan, I had created a
“mix CD” of… um… non-suggestive songs from my Samantha Fox albums so I could
listen to them in the car while the kids were in the back seat. In addition to
“Hold On Tight,” I had mixed in other bouncy tunes like “If Music Be the Food
of Love,” “Rocking with My Radio”, “Aim to Win” and “Holding” (the last three
were some of the earliest songs Ms. Fox recorded as part of a group called
S.F.X., which inspired my handwritten label). I also included songs of empowerment such as “Nothing
You Do, Nothing You Say”, “Never Gonna Fall in Love with You Again”, and
“Nothing’s Gonna Stop Me Now”. There
were love songs as well, including “I’m All You Need”, “Baby I’m Lost for
Words”, “Cause an Effect”, “Ready for this Love”, “Dreams Unfold”, and “The
Best Is Yet to Come” (which was actually “our song” at Namiko’s and my wedding
reception, which a number of guests had never before heard, yet loved – as much
as Namiko loved the look of surprise the guests gave her when she revealed who
the singer was). And I did not forget to add touching ballads such as “Out of
Our Hands”, “Dream City” and, of course, “True Devotion”.

Namiko chuckled a bit at my shorter explanation of the album
(essentially the first sentence of the previous paragraph). “’Non-suggestive’?
Are you worried about Sam Fox giving the kids ideas?”

I turned ever so briefly away from the moderate traffic
ahead of me on I-80 to toss my wife a quick look, only to reveal to her that I had
blushed a little at the remark. “No, not at all.”

However, Isamu and Aika loved to sing, and they both had the
uncanny ability to pick up 90 percent of a song’s lyrics after only a few listens
(even if they don’t fully understand all of the words). Sometimes the catchier
song lyrics are picked up straightaway. There had been a time, a few days after
watching the first Percy Jackson
movie, that Isamu, then age 6, spontaneously belted out the chorus to the soundtrack's “Highway
to Hell” (which to him was just shouting that phrase over and over and over) in
a crowdedsupermarket. Aika, at age 7, enjoyed
listening to Namiko’s Katy Perry Teenage
Dream album, and she especially enjoyed singing “I Wanna See Your Peacock
(cock cock)” at the top of her lungs on the schoolyard to see the “funny” reaction
from the teachers.

Indeed, since I had started playing my Samantha Fox mix CD in
the car, both Namiko and Isamu now loved to sing along to “Hold on Tight” and
“Rockin’ with My Radio.” Let’s just say
I didn’t want to add the catchy-yet-suggestive lyrics of “Touch Me” and
“Naughty Girls” to their vocal repertoire at this time.

Of course, my response to Namiko in the car was much
briefer: “Since the kids are going to sing along, and sing out loud, I figure
it is best they do so with songs that they both understand and that are… um… safe to
sing in public.”

“Safe…” Namiko repeated slowly, as if to emphasize my
momentary struggle to find that word.

“Yes. Safe.”

The traffic had started to pick up a little then so I had to
keep my eyes on the road, but I was sure that I heard my wife’s face crinkle
slightly with amusement.

By this time, “Hold on Tight” was in full swing, and the
kids were already singing (off-key) along in full force (yes, a pun was
intended). So that trivial topic of conversation had ended… or so I had
thought.

A few weeks later, when I had pulled the CD out for a listen
in the car, I discovered that Namiko, with the assistance of a Sharpee, decided
to have the last word…

Tuesday, July 22, 2014

I used to attend the Comic-Con International held in San Diego quite
regularly — seven years out of the decade of the naughties, in fact. This was
just before the event had exploded into the massive pop-culture phenomenon that
now offers extremely slim odds of my being able to attend.

Very interesting that it was only now that I made my first submission
into the event’s Souvenir Book. I would admit that my then lack of confidence
in my rendering of human figures made me apprehensive to participate a decade
before. Perhaps my 100-plus weeks on The Line It Is Drawn had finally emboldened
me...

The subtext of this piece was obvious. While Bob Kane may had triggered
the initial imaginative spark, it had become more and more apparent that his
collaborator Bill Finger provided much of the tinder to the creative fire that
forged the enduring concept, and legend, of the Batman. It was very likely that
the red-garbed, Flash Gordon-esque mystery man I had depicted above, which was based
on Bob Kane’s original Bat-Man concept, may had been what Kane would have
pitched to National Comics (now DC Comics) if he had not first consulted Finger.

Much of this had been brought to the public light recently thanks to
the exhaustive efforts of author and historian Marc Tyler Nobleman and
his book, Bill The Boy Wonder (a
great read for all ages). While Kane profited by the Batman creation, Finger lived
and eventually died, in the words of Nobleman, “poor and unheralded.” Nobleman
had been leading a… dare I say, noble crusade to demand DC Comics and Warner
Brothers to grant Bill Finger the co-creator credit Nobleman felt Finger deserved.

And it was not just Nobleman who believed this. Decades before Nobleman
had written his book, though it was years after Bill Finger’s death, Bob Kane
himself had publicly stated that Finger deserved co-creator credit for his
invaluable contributions to Batman (two examples I had encountered in the 1980s
were in Kane’sbiography, Batman and Me, and a one-page essay
Kane wrote for the History of the DC Universe
1988 special edition hardcover; there may had been others). It was my
understanding that DC Comics had been contractually bound to credit only Bob Kane
as the sole creator of Batman, and yet said contract was arranged by Kane
himself. So I was forced to wonder why Kane, who (albeit sporadically) eventually acknowledged
Finger’s right to co-creator credit, never renegotiated his contract with DC to
award it.

I started to sketch out this Souvenir Book submission idea back in the
beginning of this year, and almost didn’t follow through after seeing a brilliant piece by Ty Templeton (the illustrator of the Bill the Boy Wonder book) that truly emphasized the importance of Finger
to the Batman mythos. However, my wife reminded me that my idea did focus on
one key Finger contribution upon which Templeton’s piece did not explicitly
touch. Therefore, I pressed forward to create this piece that may also serve to
add one more voice to further the Nobleman cause.

Art by Xum Yukinori. Batman created by Bob Kane and Bill Finger (see,
that was not that difficult). Batman and all related characters copyright DC
Comics.

Sunday, June 15, 2014

This is an actual Father's Day card I had received a few years back from Isamu, when he was 8.

I always keep it as a reminder that:

1. There will always be times I'll receive this message from my kids
2. When I do, they do not actually hate me, they just think they do
3. Kids always change their minds... in many cases very easily
4. Most likely they actually hate something I did, so I should assess how I have done them wrong
5. There is no perfect Dad... or perfect kids

I wish the best to fathers everywhere, and to the kids that put up with them.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

As a fan of the wonderful-yet-no-longer-produced
“Green Lantern: The Animated Series”(GLTAS), I
immensely enjoy the opportunity to draw characters from that programme in a number of submissions to “The Line It Is Drawn” (responding to Twitter suggestions
from whom must be other fans of the series). This led to a number of GLTAS-related
art commission requests from other fans of the programme (some of which have
been featured in my “Unapologetic Zaree [戯絵]” series on this blog).

This piece pictured is a compilation of some of those works (with a little additional art for the front cover). Ever since parts of this piece was posted by Josh Keaton on his blog a few weeks ago, I have received a number of
questions (and some hate mail) about it. The intent was to create a facsimile
of the next DVD release if the series had continued for another season, but not
as a hoax to make people believe the show was being renewed (and my sincerest apologies to those who were inadvertently deceived). It was essentially
a “thank you” gift for certain GLTAS cast and crew members that were scheduled to attend the recent
WonderCon event in Anaheim, California -- with the message being along the lines
of “hopefully one day you’ll be able to share the stories you currently do not
have the chance to tell.”

Right now this is the closest I can show of the complete
piece, as I do not have the actual label art file at this time. While I did
create all of the artwork and indicia here in Japan, the label layout was put together and
printed by a friend of mine in the States (who also delivered the gifts and provided the above photo).

Enjoy. And please note that these labels are not real and these cases are empty -- for now.

Many of these shows were represented in a “wanted
poster” in the background, with taped “updates” containing an overgeneralized reason
why these shows are no longer being produced (and for the sake of accuracy,
there is really no single factor that ends the production of an animated television show, so these
simplified explanations are not to be taken as hard fact).

The 16 characters on the poster were obscured either by
these taped updates or the figures of the animated Hal Jordan (from Green Lantern) and Artemis (from Young Justice) in
the foreground. So as a “DVD extra” (and to demonstrate that I can be
irrationally obsessive with detail), I am showing the full poster unblocked.
Enjoy.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

For a change of pace, here are five facts about Xum Yukinori
that he has not yet posted on his blog:

1. The 12 countries Xum has resided in are:South Africa, Japan, China, Malaysia,
Singapore, the United States, Canada, Australia, the United Kingdom, France,
Greece, and Spain.

2. One of Xum’s favorite aunties loves to tease him and Namiko about
their marriage being “dekichatta kekkon” (although love had everything to do
with it).

3. Namiko has never told Xum about Isamu’s biological father; and
Xum has never asked.

4. Xum had never attended art school; the only “formal training”
on illustration he had received was during his tenure working in a manhua
studio in Hong Kong, where he picked up valuable tips and techniques from his
fellow artists.

5. “Professor Xum” is not really a Professor (but he believes
that you already knew that).

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About Me

Former adman. Currently a marketing consultant for cellular technology and health care service industries. Former manhua background/crowd-control artist. Artist for "The Line It Is Drawn." Former resident of 12 countries. Current resident of California. Finally returned from Kokubunji, Tokyo, Japan.